Make an effort to be fully present during school time.
During school time with my kiddos, I am often reminded how important it is for me to be “fully present.” If I don’t make a conscious effort to focus on my kids, I can easily be distracted. The telephone, computer, people at the door, cooking tasks, laundry, texting, errands, or a million tasks can divide my attention. When I am doing all these tasks while schooling, my boys are continually waiting on me. This means their school day (and mine) drags on longer than it should!
Try to minimize interruptions and limit outside tasks during school time.
So, I am reminded anew to try to minimize interruptions and limit my tasks to a time when I am not teaching. Depending on the ages of your students, you can do this in several ways…
For younger students, try alternating school time with breaks.
If your students are young, you can alternate a half hour of school with a half hour break. Simply continue this alternating pattern until the school subjects are done for the day. This pattern alternates chunks of school time with chunks of free time. We followed this plan for years when our boys were young, so we know it works. Just be sure to return to school after each half hour break!
For older students, try focused teaching hours.
If your students are older, and their school day is longer, you can focus your teaching time during certain hours. At our house, we typically teach from 9 A.M. – 1 P.M. With this plan, the kiddos often have school left in the afternoon, but my formal teaching is done by 1 PM. I simply schedule more independent subjects for my boys to complete after 1:00 PM.
The last few years, our older boys have done several school subjects in the evening to “get ahead.” They always do independent subjects that would typically be done after lunch the next day. Working ahead helps them finish by 1:00 PM the next day, which they prefer. Doing several subjects in the evening is another option to help your children get done earlier.
Or, try a scheduled mid-day break before returning to school.
One other scenario we tried in the past was to take a scheduled mid-day break. One year we took a scheduled break from 1:00-3:30 PM. This allowed me to deal with many things that needed my attention before it got too late in the day. We then returned to school from 3:30-5:30 PM. This was a plan that worked for a year, but I must admit it was hard to return to school at 3:30!
It is amazing what can be accomplished in a short time if you are fully present.
I am amazed what I can get done in a very short time with my boys if I am “fully present.” While this is not always possible, I encourage you to see with a new light any time stealers that really can wait. Strive to be mentally and physically present as much as possible during school time. If emergencies and situations that need to be dealt with occur, return to the pattern of being fully present as soon as possible. I am trying to focus on being fully present and am finding new joy in the time I do have with my boys!
Blessings,
Carrie
This Post Has 2 Comments
I have a hard time leaving the room, as they all start fighting. With their autism, it is hard to control. If I am there, it is not so bad. Maybe we need to take more than just one 10 minute break and lunch break. Thanks. I’ll try more breaks.
Thanks for your comment, Bobbi! One of my sons needed breaks more often than my other sons. Adding more short breaks for him throughout his homeschool day totally changed things for the better for him! He was more able to focus and completed his work more thoroughly (before the breaks he actually took longer to do the work and missed steps as well). I hope adding more breaks helps your kiddos as much as it helped my son!